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Cultures in Conflict--The American Civil War

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Cultures in Conflict--The American Civil War

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780313306518

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Greenwood Press

Publication Date:

30th March 2000

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Cultural studies
Civil wars
Early modern warfare (including gunpowder warfare)

Dewey:

973.7

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

240

Description

The American Civil War was primarily a conflict of cultures, and slavery was the largest single cultural factor separating North and South. This collection of carefully selected memoirs, diaries, letters, and reminiscences of ordinary Northerners and Southerners who experienced the war as soldiers or civilians brings to life the conflict in culture, principles, attitudes, hopes, courage, and suffering of both sides. Woodworth, a Civil War historian, has selected a wide variety of moving first person accounts, each of which tells a story of a life as well as the attitudes of ordinary people and the real conditions of war and homefront. Woodworth presents the war in the words of those who lived it. Contrasting selections will help the reader to see the war through the eyes of Northerners and Southerners as: soldiers prepare for war; women's lives change after the men go to war; soldiers on both sides experience the difficulties of camp life; sweethearts (the half-sister of Mary Todd Lincoln and her Confederate fianc) exchange heartfelt letters; a husband's letters and his wife's diary recount their love, his death in battle, and her deep loss, countered by her faith; soldiers and civilians recount the carnage of the war's devastating battles; and people on both sides reflect on the outcome of the war and its consequences to their way of life. The accounts contrast the writers' attitudes toward Northern and Southern society, the principles for which those societies stood, and the religious significance of the war. These accounts and the narrative discussion of the difference in culture will help readers to understand the Civil War as a conflict of cultures. Telling the story of the war as personal history makes the experience of the Civil War come alive for readers.

Reviews

.,."its first-person accounts are excellent reminders that in the final analysis all history is a mosaic of each individual's experiences."-American Reference Books Annual
.,."often provocative....a useful addition to a Civil War course..."-Civil War History
.,."skillfully written and edited and an excellent read for beginning students and general readers."-Choice
...its first-person accounts are excellent reminders that in the final analysis all history is a mosaic of each individual's experiences.-American Reference Books Annual
...often provocative....a useful addition to a Civil War course...-Civil War History
...skillfully written and edited and an excellent read for beginning students and general readers.-Choice
Highly recommended as being a broad-minded, fair-handed study of the forces shaping the war and the scars left behind in their wake, Cultures In Conflict is enhanced for both scholarship and the non-specialist general reader with appendixes offering the text of Ho Chi Minh's declaration of independence and his letter to President Harry S Truman.-MBR: Internet Bookwatch
Steven E. Woodworth gets at the heart of the Civil War.-Civil War Times
This book should appeal to a wide audience and will find a home in many undergraduate classrooms.-Journal of Southern History
This informative book presents history at its best....a wonderful starting point for essays or classroom discussions.-VOYA
..."often provocative....a useful addition to a Civil War course..."-Civil War History
..."skillfully written and edited and an excellent read for beginning students and general readers."-Choice
"Steven E. Woodworth gets at the heart of the Civil War."-Civil War Times
"This book should appeal to a wide audience and will find a home in many undergraduate classrooms."-Journal of Southern History
"This informative book presents history at its best....a wonderful starting point for essays or classroom discussions."-VOYA
"This is the Civil War as it really was, not from the halls of power, but from the homes of those who did the fighting, the dying and of those who carried on."-Star Banner
"Highly recommended as being a broad-minded, fair-handed study of the forces shaping the war and the scars left behind in their wake, Cultures In Conflict is enhanced for both scholarship and the non-specialist general reader with appendixes offering the text of Ho Chi Minh's declaration of independence and his letter to President Harry S Truman."-MBR: Internet Bookwatch

Author Bio

STEVEN E. WOODWORTH teaches history at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, TX. He is the author of several books, including The American Civil War, published by Greenwood Press, as well as Jefferson Davis and his Generals, Davis and Lee at War, and Six Armies in Tennessee.

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